Become A Football Legend-Chapter 253: Masterclass (by Korybiant)

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Chapter 253: Masterclass (by Korybiant)

"Old Trafford is demanding something," the commentator said. "And Frankfurt are refusing. They are refusing with every block, every tackle, every clearance."

United thought they had their moment when Bruno slipped Højlund through a narrow channel and the striker stabbed the ball past Trapp. The net rippled, the stadium erupted, and Højlund sprinted away pounding his chest.

Then the flag went up.

The roar died mid-air, turning into a collective groan of disbelief. Replays rolled. Højlund’s shoulder, just beyond the line, just too eager. VAR confirmed it with merciless precision. Offside. No goal.

Amorim’s hands went to his head. Bruno stood over the ball for the restart, staring into the distance like he couldn’t believe the night was still fighting him.

United threw everything forward after that because they had no choice. The game turned into a siege again, but Frankfurt’s block became even deeper, even uglier. Lukas dropped back to patrol the space in front of the box, and for the next minutes, he was everywhere. He nicked the ball off Bruno with a toe poke as Bruno tried to shift it onto his right. He stepped in front of a Højlund cutback and blocked it with his body. He tracked a late runner into the box and leaned him off balance without conceding a foul, then turned and yelled at his midfield to squeeze up.

"Look at him," the commentator said, almost reverent now. "Hat-trick hero and he’s still making tackles like a holding midfielder in stoppage time. This is not just talent. This is mentality."

United’s pressure nearly found its equaliser on a chaotic scramble where a loose ball pinged off shins and landed at Bruno’s feet inside the area. Bruno swung, aiming for the far corner, and Lukas threw himself across again, the ball ricocheting off his thigh and bouncing away. Koch hacked it clear and screamed in triumph like they’d scored.

But United were not done. They found one last desperate counter of their own, born from the single chance Frankfurt had in the second half of extra time.

Ekitike had won a corner from a breakaway by Uzun, his shot from outside the box was saved by Onana and went out for a corner which Lukas walked over to take.

Lukas raised both hands and launches the corner, but Maguire’s defensive header launched the ball out and it dropped toward Amad, who had space and hunger and the kind of legs that still had spring. He took it in stride and exploded down the pitch. Tuta and Larsson were the last line near halfway, both turning, both sprinting, both realising instantly they were losing the race.

Amad knocked it past them and went right through the gap between them, backing himself on pace, the kind of run that turns stadium noise into a rising scream. In two seconds he was in the final third. Trapp came out, arms wide, trying to make himself big, trying to buy time that didn’t exist.

Amad looked up, ready to strike.

Then a tackle came from the side like a car crash.

The ball was swept clean off Amad’s boots and skidded straight into Trapp’s path. The keeper gathered it, falling forward onto it like a man protecting treasure. Amad hit the deck, arms flailing, rage spilling out of him as he looked for a whistle that didn’t arrive.

It was Lukas.

He had chased. He had chased like the match was still 0-0 and his career depended on it. He had galloped from the edge of United’s box after that corner, draining whatever was left in his legs, and he had arrived just in time to save the entire tie with one sliding, perfect, exhausted piece of defending.

Then he stayed on the ground.

Flat on his back, arms spread, staring into the night sky above Old Trafford as his chest rose and fell violently. He lifted both legs at once and the cramps hit, visible in the way his knees jerked and his face tightened.

Larsson ran to him first and grabbed one leg gently, lifting it.

"Breathe," he urged, more with his hands than his words, trying to ease the lock in Lukas’s muscles. A medic sprinted on, kneeling beside him. Trapp shouted, waving for calm, while the ball was already being launched back upfield, out for a United throw, time bleeding away.

Bruno was furious. He sprinted to the referee, arms chopping through the air, pointing back toward the tackle. "Last man! Last man!" his body language screamed, demanding a red.

The referee’s response was immediate and clear. A sharp shake of the head, two hands miming ball-first contact. No debate. Play on.

"He’s got the ball," the commentator said, breathless. "He’s absolutely got the ball. That’s a phenomenal tackle. What a sprint from the corner flag."

And that was the moment Toppmöller decided... it was enough.

"What more can I ask of this kid?"

He turned to the fourth official, made the substitution sign with a sharp snap of his hands, and pointed toward Lukas with the urgency of a man who had just watched his season almost evaporate. Batshuayi was called. The board went up. Lukas tried to get up quickly, but his ankle complained, his calf threatened to seize again, and he ended up limping toward the touchline with the medic hovering close.

As he made his way off, the big screen caught him. 3 goals replaying, one after another, his face flashing large over Old Trafford. The home fans were so quiet you could hear individual shouts from the Frankfurt section. And the away end gave him the kind of standing ovation that sounded like gratitude and worship at the same time.

"A first hat-trick," the commentator said, voice slowing into something poetic, something historic, "and he’s done it here. Old Trafford. A stage that has swallowed great players whole. And tonight it has been owned by a 16-year-old in white." 𝒻𝑟ℯℯ𝑤𝑒𝑏𝑛𝘰𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝒸𝑜𝘮

Lukas paused for a second at the edge of the pitch, glanced up at the screen, then at the away end. He raised one hand briefly, not even triumphant now, more like acknowledgement, and then he stepped off.

Frankfurt shut the game down with the last scraps of energy. Batshuayi chased lost causes. Ekitiké helped in the channels. Koch and Tuta headed everything. Kristensen cleared another cross into the night. Trapp caught one final desperate delivery and fell onto the ball like a man falling onto a life raft.

The whistle did not so much end the match as it sealed a story.

Old Trafford stood still, frozen in disbelief, as the reality finally settled in. Eintracht Frankfurt had come here trailing by two goals, wounded by a 4–2 defeat at home, written off by pundits, mocked by fans, dismissed as brave but doomed. And now, under the harsh lights of the Theatre of Dreams, they had won 4–1.

A European giant had been undone.

Not by money.

Not by pedigree.

But by belief—and by a boy.

"Listen to this place," came the voice from the commentary booth, softer now, reverent. "Old Trafford... silent. Eintracht Frankfurt have turned a deficit into a demolition. Four goals unanswered. A hat-trick from a sixteen-year-old. History written where history is supposed to be protected."

A/N: Another banger by Korybiant. Thanks so much for the dragon, I genuinely appreciate it! Big motivation!

Love y’all.

-Writ.